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Resources Focus on Nebraska’s Amazing Wetlands

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A serene evening scene across an Elkhorn River oxbow wetland at Wood Duck Wildlife Management Area near Norfolk.

Photo by Ted LaGrange

By Ted LaGrange, Wetland Program Manager

When my oldest child was in elementary school in the 1990s, I was invited to give a class presentation on wetlands. When I asked the students if Nebraska had any wetlands and whether any cool animals lived in them, I was shocked to hear them say, “No.”

They knew more about the Everglades of Florida and the Amazon of South America than they did about wetlands in their own state.

I wanted to fix this and started a project at Nebraska Game and Parks to help address the problem; we wrote and published a wetlands guide and produced an educational video, as well. The project was highly successful, but, as happens, the materials became outdated. At the same time, the ways people consume information changed.

Fast forward to 2019 when a project got underway to update outreach and education products related to wetlands.

Guide to Nebraska’s Wetlands is a free, full-color publication. It defines and describes Nebraska wetlands and discusses wetland functions, dynamics, classification, inventory and conservation efforts. Fourteen wetland complexes are covered in depth.

In addition to updating our Guide to Nebraska’s Wetlands, we also created a new publication for kids called Wetlandology and worked with the Platte Basin Timelapse group at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln to create five documentary films. They highlight Nebraska’s wetland types: playa, sandhill, saline, riverine and urban, and feature people, places and animals who depend on them to survive.

We wanted people to know:

  • Nebraska has more wetlands than any surrounding state.
  • Wetlands are highly productive and dynamic and are probably best known for the diversity of fish, wildlife and plants they support.
  • Wetlands provide important habitat for 50 percent of our birds and plants, 100 percent of our amphibians and fish, a third of our mammals and reptiles, and 70 percent of threatened or endangered species.

Less well known, but certainly as important, are the benefits that wetlands serve in improving water quality, recharging groundwater, sequestering carbon, protecting us from flood damage and providing places to recreate.

In many places, Nebraska’s wetlands have suffered losses and face ongoing threats putting their benefits at risk. We hope sharing these stories about Nebraska’s wetlands will help to improve the conservation of these important areas.

Visit NebraskaWetlands.com to check out these amazing new products and stories. You will be pleasantly surprised by what you discover.

Nebraska Game and Parks and PBT coordinated this project with the Nebraska Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit at UNL, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and Ducks Unlimited. We also sought input from 45 partner agencies and organizations.